What follows is part of an article in the News and Views section an upcoming edition of The White Worker, the official newsletter for the American Nazi Party.
I did a previous post about The White Worker in September of last year, looking at how it came about and what it took to publish it each month, featuring a short Q&A with the editor, HAKoehler. Little did I know…
A few months later, HAK asked if I would be willing to take over editorial duties for the publication. Humbled and honored to be asked, I said “yes” and starting this year I will be overseeing the production of that publication, in addition to the Amerika Erwache blog and podcast.
As you can imagine, this requires more than a small degree of effort and time, and some overlap is unavoidable. Some of what I write here is likely to show up there, and visa versa. For those that frequent this blog or listen to the podcast, I hope you will forgive me. I’m not trying to be lazy, I’m trying to be efficient. 🙂
This post is one of those overlaps. It was simply too timely to wait until The White Worker comes out in a couple of weeks. The next post will be as well, as it is focused on Charles Lindbergh, whose birthday happens to fall on Tuesday, February 4th- the very day I post the blog and podcast.
With all that housekeeping out of the way, let’s begin. After all, it’s been an uneventful couple of weeks…Not! First, let’s get the elephant out of the room: Trump is not and is never going to be an advocate for National Socialism. He is a Judeo-Capitalist elitist. Period. Full stop.
That being established, we also need to be honest with ourselves: he was better than the alternative, and there are aspects of his presidency which generally align with our beliefs and values (e.g., placing American considerations before those of foreign countries; using American resources, both intellectual and environmental, to halt our dependence on foreign energy; removing the United States from the corrupt, elitist, globalist World Health Organization; stating categorically that there are two sexes; stopping the flood of illegals pouring across our border, etc).
However, that there are aspects of his presidency which are appealing is both good and bad. The good is that American citizens have the opportunity recover from the insane social relativism of the Biden administration and roll-back the DEI tide that was threatening to swamp the country. Likewise, it’s possible a more responsible (and manageable) immigration system will implemented, among other positive course corrections.
The bad is that it can lead to a sense of complacency. A feeling like the country is on the right track again. It’s not. A Trump administration or, more generally, any “conservative” administration, serves to preserve the existing system, and ultimately suffers from the same flaw that a “liberal” administration labors under: it’s part of a system that lends itself to global-elitist control, selfish motivations, and corporate greed: A system designed to protect the wealthy at the expense of everyone else. The BlackRocks, Soros’, Gates’, and Lockheed Martins of the world are not going to blink an eye, or miss an opportunity to game the system regardless of who is in nominally in charge. It’s no coincidence that the world’s richest man, Elon Musk, is joined at the hip with the new American president. Indeed, one could argue that the American Judeo-Capitialist system makes such a pairing inevitable.
It is important to remember that National Socialists are not liberal or conservative. In the context of our current system, we are revolutionaries advocating for a completely different system of government, national culture, and a world-view most contemporary left or right-wingers simply would not understand. That is why we do what we do: to help our racial brothers and sisters see the truth.
But first, for all of that—again, let’s be honest—many of the sweeping executive actions signed on Trump’s first day served to roll-back the heinous, globalist, neo-communist orders instigated by the shadowy people in the previous administration, and signed by their sock-puppet Slow Biden. There’s something to be said for not looking a gift-horse in the mouth.
Net positives include executive orders rescinding 78 Biden-era orders. A few of note are:
- Immediately suspending the CPB-1 Border App facilitating undocumented immigrants being waved into the country;
- Suspending all federal DEI programs and placing those persons in charge of those programs on administrative leave, directing secretary of transportation and Federal Aviation Administration to end DEI initiatives and “immediately return to non-discriminatory, merit-based hiring.”
- A regulatory freeze preventing bureaucrats from issuing any more regulations until the transition is complete.
- A freeze on all federal hiring except in the military and a number of other excluded categories.
- A requirement that federal workers return to full-time, in-person work.
- Ordered that the Secretary of Defense shall, within 10-days, deliver to the President a plan “to seal the borders and maintain the sovereignty, territorial integrity, and security of the United States by repelling forms of invasion including unlawful mass migration, narcotics trafficking, human smuggling and trafficking, and other criminal activities.”
- Issued formal notice that the United States is withdrawing from the World Health Organization.
- Pardon those involved in the January 6, 2021 demonstration.
- Restoring the use of capital punishment when warranted and appropriate.
- Stopping birth-right “anchor baby” citizenship.
- Eliminating the EV mandate
- Stated that “It is the policy of the United States to recognize two sexes, male and female. These sexes are not changeable and are grounded in fundamental and incontrovertible reality.”
There were, and continue to be, other Executive Orders (which, in the distant past were called “Royal Decrees”). Of course, it wouldn’t be Trump if there wasn’t at least one that made you scratch your head and go, “huh?”: Signed by his Royal Orangeness, let it be known that “The area formerly known as the Gulf of Mexico has long been an integral asset to our once burgeoning Nation and has remained an indelible part of America…in recognition of this flourishing economic resource and its critical importance to our Nation’s economy and its people, I am directing that it officially be renamed the Gulf of America.” Who knew? I wonder what it will cost to print new maps.
The one that really caught my eye is titled “Ending the Weaponization of the Federal Government” which orders “The Director of National Intelligence, in consultation with the heads of the appropriate departments and agencies within the Intelligence Community, shall take all appropriate action to review the activities of the Intelligence Community over the last 4 years…”. It will be interesting to see what they come up with—if we ever find out.
However, for balance and to make sure we are not drinking too deeply from the orange Kool-aid, one would do well to remember that nothing in Washington is ever as simple or as straight-forward as it seems. Case in point: Trump’s proposed cabinet.
The first time Donald Trump was elected president, he assembled the wealthiest Cabinet the country had ever seen, with a combined net worth of a little more than $6 billion. This time around, if all of Trump’s Cabinet nominees are confirmed, their combined wealth will easily surpass $14 billion and could be more than $20 billion. Add in Elon Musk and other members of the Trump 2.0 entourage who don’t require Senate confirmation, and the combined net worth jumps past $450 billion.
It’s not all about the money per se. It’s about influence and agendas. At the time of this writing not all of Trump’s Cabinet has been confirmed, but even if some of his picks go by the wayside, that these individuals were proposed in the first place tells us a lot.
Now, admittedly, creating a cabinet can be a difficult task: do you fill a position with an experienced Washington insider with political chops, or go outside the Swamp and try to find someone who could manage the position without being beholden to it? It can be a fine line to walk, but apparently one that doesn’t concern Trump at all, for example: his nominee for the Secretary of Energy is the CEO of the second largest fracking company in the US. No conflict of interest there I’m sure.
Indeed, one sees a pattern: a fair number of people proposed for Trump’s Cabinet are industry lobbyists or insiders who have a personal stake in the actions of the departments they will be managing, or they are among the top donors to Trump’s campaign, often with a vested interest in the conduct of the departments they will oversee.
Here are a few of the “line crossing” examples that should raise eyebrows:
Scott Besset– Sec. of Treasury: Homosexual and former partner of the Soros Management Fund, founder of global investment firm Key Square Group, and fundraiser for Al Gore, Hillary Clinton, and Barack Obama. This time around he was a major donor to Trump campaign (2024)—I guess you could say he swings both ways— and contributed $1 million to Trump’s inauguration. For icing on the cake, he is a former president of Yale’s secret Wolf’s Head Society. Net worth $521 million.
Pam Bondi– Attorney General: as Florida attorney general, her office was investigating allocations of fraud regarding Trump University and considering joining a class-action lawsuit. After a donation to her PAC from Trump, she declined to pursue the allegations. After her term in Florida, she worked as a lobbyist for Ballard Group and registered as a foreign agent for the Embassy of the State of Quatar. She also worked as a lobbyist for the GEO Group, a private prison company, which is a government contractor for immigration facilities. Catch that? Trump nominated the lobbyist for a private prison company to be the next Attorney General. Net worth: estimated $2 million.
Sean Duffy– Sec. Of Transportation: former chair of the House Financial Services Committee’s housing subcommittee, who resigned to work for lobbying firm BGR Group. BGR Group clients include: Bahrain, Bangladesh, India and South Korea, as well as corporate clients Comcast, Pfizer, CreditSuisse, and MassMutual. Estimated net worth: $4 million to $12 million dollars.
Howard Lutnick– Sec. Of Commerce: Jew and CEO of financial services firm Cantor Fitzgerald, one of twenty-four primary dealers authorized to trade with the Federal Reserve. He is also a close personal friend Donald Trump. Net worth: $2 billion.
Brooke Rollins– Sec. Of Agriculture: former CEO of the Texas Public Policy Foundation, funded by Koch brothers as well as GEO prison group [see Pam Bondi above], Chevron and ExxonMobile. TPPF is also on the Heritage Foundation’s Project 2025 advisory board. Net worth: $5 to $10 million.
Chris Wright – Sec. Of Energy: CEO of Liberty Energy, America’s second largest fracking company and which processes 20% of all onshore wells in the United States. Liberty Energy contributes 10% of total U.S. energy production with a market value of $3 billion. He also donated a quarter of a million dollars to Trump’s 2024 campaign. Net worth: $171 million.
Jamieson Greer – United States Trade Representative, with the rank of Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary: partner in the law firm King & Spalding, which handles Trumps real estate empire, and in 2018 the firm filed a Foreign Agents Registration Act application notifying their work as an advisor to the Saudi Arabian organization King Abdullah City for Atomic and Renewable Energy, which was created by King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz Al Saud to pursue a nuclear program. Net worth: unknown
Kelly Loeffler – Administrator of the Small Business Administration: CEO of Bakkt Holdings, Inc., which provides a software as a service (SaaS) and API platform for owning and trading cryptocurrency and redeeming loyalty points. Bakkt, in turn, is owned by her husband’s company Intercontinental Exchange (ICE), which also owns the New York Stock Exchange. Bakkt earns revenue from commissions for payments and purchases and sales of cryptocurrency. Net worth (with husband): $800 million
John Ratcliffe – Director of CIA: Visiting fellow with the Heritage Foundation and contributor to Project 2025. Net worth: $7 million
Russell Vought – Director of Office of Management and Budget. Worked for Heritage Action, the lobbying arm of The Heritage Foundation, and on the advisory board for Project 2025. He is also an evangelical Christian Nationalist. Net worth: $1 million (he’s the token poor man of the group.)
Yes, Trump’s first week was a doozy, and there were some real and tangible positives to come from it. But as the above nominations suggest, what they may really be doing is laying the groundwork for nothing short of a burn-and-pillage administration whose sole agenda is to make it a great deal easier for the extremely wealthy to make a great deal more money.
Amerika Erwache!
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